Though he wasn’t able to defend his 200 fly national title, Michigan junior Dylan Bosch was named the conference’s Swimmer of the Year, and his coach Mike Bottom earned swimming Coach of the Year honors.

Hilary Caldwell broke onto the international scene in the 200 backstroke in 2013 where she won the bronze medal at the World Championships in Barcelona, and this week she’ll be fighting for a spot on the 2015 World Championship roster.

Deep in the heart of Texas Eddie Reese has been coaching the Longhorns since 1978, churning out world-class athletes and creating a historic program which resulted this weekend in tying him as the winningest coach in college swimming.

The NCAA has released the psych sheet and individual team rosters for the 2013 Women’s NCAA Championships. There were a number of changes to the psych sheets after the original release, with the cut line being pushed up to 38 swimmers per event across the board.

Georgia leads the way with 17 individual qualifiers, followed by Big Ten champion Minnesota (14) and Texas A&M (13). Florida (2010 NCAA team champion) and Cal Berkeley (2011 and 2012 NCAA team champion) each have 12 qualifiers. Here’s a breakdown of the other big-name teams at the meet.

TEAM

INDIVIDUAL QUALIFIERS

Georgia

17

Minnesota

14

Texas A&M

13

Cal Berkeley

12

Florida

12

Indiana

11

North Carolina

11

Southern Cal

11

Virginia

11

Arizona

10

Auburn

10

Tennessee

10

Texas

10

Penn State

9

Stanford

9

Check back here shortly for more insight and information on the official release.

Let’s go DAWGS…..Let’s go DAWGS….Let’s go DAWGS…WOOF WOOF WOOF. Get used to hearing this chant a lot in Indy! Georgia with a full roster of 17 swimmers and a great diver too, it should be a fun NCAA meet this year.

Interesting that Pelton went with 200 Free instead of 100 Back…It seemed like Cal could have had a 1-2-3 finish but maybe they wanted to attempt muscling Pelton into the 200 Free “A” Final instead. As Braden noted, Romano also chose the 50 Free instead of this event too.

About Morgan Priestley

A recent graduate of Stanford University and Birmingham, Michigan native, Morgan Priestley started writing for SwimSwam in February 2013 on a whim, and is loving that his tendency to follow and over-analyze swim results can finally be put to good use.Morgan swam competitively for 15+ years, primarily excelling in the …